Leonie Pethig, Arpat Ozgul, Michael Heistermann, Claudia Fichtel, Peter M Kappeler
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Most mammals, including humans, exhibit even or slightly male-biased birth sex ratios (BSRs) and female-biased adult sex ratios (ASRs) much later in life due to higher male mortality rates. The group-living primates of Madagascar are unusual in this respect because they lack female-biased ASRs, but it is unknown whether this is the result of skewed BSRs or sex-specific disappearance patterns. Using long-term demographic data from wild red-fronted lemurs (Eulemur rufifrons), we analysed their sex ratio dynamics across the lifespan. We assessed BSR via prenatal sex determination using maternal faecal oestrogen metabolite measurements during late pregnancy, confirming a visually determined equal sex ratio three months after birth, and indicating no early sex-specific mortality. Demographic analyses additionally disclosed higher female disappearance within the first 8 years of age, likely associated with reproductive effort early in life. Thereby, adult male survival had the greatest positive effect on the ASR. Our study offers a rare perspective on the dynamics of age- and sex-specific disappearance in a wild primate population, whose sex-reversed patterns may also contribute to a more general understanding of the mechanisms generating sex-biased mortality.
期刊介绍:
Previously a supplement to Proceedings B, and launched as an independent journal in 2005, Biology Letters is a primarily online, peer-reviewed journal that publishes short, high-quality articles, reviews and opinion pieces from across the biological sciences. The scope of Biology Letters is vast - publishing high-quality research in any area of the biological sciences. However, we have particular strengths in the biology, evolution and ecology of whole organisms. We also publish in other areas of biology, such as molecular ecology and evolution, environmental science, and phylogenetics.